The U.S. Air Force's famed 48th Tactical Fighter Wing (TFW) was an
important unit during the Cold War. Based at RAF Lakenheath in England, it was
in a key position to protect Western Europe from a possible Soviet
invasion. The Cold War ended two decades ago, yet the 48th TFW is still there!
Meanwhile, the Air Force continues to reduce its fighter squadrons to about half
the number at the end of the Cold war. Its budget is higher today, but
Generals feel that smaller numbers of ultra-expensive advanced fighters are
better than larger numbers of "legacy" fighters that are still in
production, like the F-15SG and F-16E. The Air
Force closed some fighter bases a decade ago, but needs to close more to eliminate excess
infrastructure.

The Air Force justifies airbases in
Germany and Italy since they are close to U.S. Army bases and potential areas of conflict. However,
RAF Lakenheath is located in the world's most peaceful region, and one of its most
expensive. The Air Force rotates personnel every three years, which requires the
shipping of family household goods, pets, and children. After a 48th TFW family and
home is expensively forward-deployed to England, the Air Force deploys their dad
yet again for missions in the Middle East. Since Europe lacks large fighter
training areas, squadrons from the 48th TFW routinely fly to Nellis AFB in Nevada
for training. Obviously, the Air Force could save millions of dollars a year by
moving the 48th TFW to the USA where it can train at American ranges and deploy
to the Middle East, or to train with European allies, without the senseless
household shuttles to England.

Over
the next five years, the Air Force plans
to retire 137 F-15s, 177 F-16s, and nine A-10s to
save $3.4 billion. With the F-22 program ending with less than
half the F-15s replaced, the Air Force is pondering which fighter wings to clip. It has hinted
most will come from the Air National Guard, but has not explained who will fill
their homeland defense mission. How
can Generals claim they lack fighters to defend American territory when 72
are based in England?

Air Force Generals have yet to present a plan to
trim the excess infrastructure left after all these aircraft disappear. It is
doubtful they will suggest another round of domestic base closures during a
national economic depression. Closing American airbases while
retaining an outdated airbase in England is unpatriotic and irresponsible.
Moving
the 48th TFW to fill emptied airbases in the USA is overdue. Since
the base is officially a British RAF base, it would not close, and would be
available should the 48th ever need to redeploy to help defend Western Europe
from whatever threat may arise in the distant future. There would be no base
closing costs or worries about local economic impact. The savings from closing
Lakenheath would free funds to maintain a larger number of aircraft worldwide.

The
U.S. Air
Force would still have its large airbase at nearby RAF Mildenhall, England. Generals
may oppose this idea because England is an interesting duty station, and most never
support closing any of "their" facilities. The British will strongly
oppose this move because it will cost them millions of dollars in annual
business and thousands of jobs, although they will spin this into concern about
maintaining a "close alliance" with the USA. If an
American suggests they spend an equal amount to maintain a fighter wing at an
airbase in the USA, they would laugh aloud at the wasteful idea.

The benefits of vacating Lakenheath far outweigh any perceived
benefit of maintaining the 72 F-15s of the 48th TFW in England. This allows the
Air Force to eliminate 3000 civilian and military base support positions. Fighters based in
the USA are much closer to large training areas and available for
homeland defense missions. The expensive overseas personnel rotations would be
eliminated. Finally, several million dollars a year in U.S. military spending
would flow back into the American economy rather than benefit the English.